He set my coffee and croissant down in front of me. He had ordered hot chocolate for himself and he sipped it carefully, a small frothy mustache forming on his upper lip. We smiled at each other again.
“I should have got in touch,” he repeated.
We took gulps of our drinks and looked at each other over the rims of the cups.
“I heard that you fixed Morris pretty good,” he said.
“It was him or me.”
“Was it really with an iron?”
“That’s right.”
“It must have hurt him.”
“Oh yes.”
“I guess I should be pleased about that,” he said. “You know those Yakuza gangs in Japan? When they kill you, they do whatever they do until you’re unconscious. Then they drag you outside and drive a car over and over you, breaking all your bones. There’s a theory that you suffer pain on a very primitive level so you feel it even when you’re in a coma and dying.”
“Nice,” I said, pulling a face.
“I felt for some time that I ought to do something to Morris. I thought of him hanging around with me and all the time him knowing what he’d done to Mum.”
“I think that was part of the point.”
“Then I thought, Fuck it. But maybe when he gets out.”
“He won’t get out until he’s a doddery old man.”
“A doddery old man with an arthritic knee,” Josh said with a grin.
“I hope so. Fred will be out sooner. I was talking to Links about it. The trial won’t be until next year, but for something minor like strangling your ex-girlfriend because she dumped you, he won’t serve more than eight or ten years.”
He put his cup down on the table and ran a thumb over his top lip, rubbing away the chocolate.
“I don’t know what I want to ask you,” he said in frustration. “I think a lot about asking you about it all, but now I don’t know what I want to ask. I know what happened and everything; I know all of that-it isn’t that.” He frowned and stared hopelessly at me with those eyes of his that had always made me think of Jenny, and he looked suddenly much younger, like the Josh I remembered from our ruinous summer.
“You think there’s something I should be able to tell you.”
“Something like that,” he mumbled, and drew a finger through a small heap of sugar on the table. I remembered saying almost the same to Grace, all those months ago on the heath. I took a breath.
“Your mother was murdered by Morris for fun. Then he picked on me, and if I hadn’t been lucky you could have been sitting here with the next woman he chose, or the one after that. There’s no reason. It could have been anyone, only it happened to be Jenny. And I’m really sorry,” I added after a pause.
“ ’S’all right,” he muttered, still making patterns in the sugar, not looking up.
“How’s school?”
“I go to a different one now. It seemed a good idea to change.”
“Yeah.”
“It’s better. I’ve got friends.”
“Good.”
“And I’ve been seeing someone.”
“You mean a girlfriend?”
“No. Someone. To talk about things.”
“Oh, well, that’s good as well.” I looked at him helplessly.
“What about you?”
“Me?”
“What are you doing now?”
“This and that.”
“You mean the same as before?”
“No, I don’t,” I said vigorously. I gestured to the small nylon hold-all tucked under my chair. “Do you know what’s in that bag?”
“What?”
“Among other things, five juggling balls.”
He looked at me as if he didn’t understand.
“Five,” I repeated. “What do you think of that?”
“That’s amazing,” he said, clearly impressed.
“My master plan is to get out of this work altogether, but in the meantime I haven’t exactly been standing still.”
“Show me,” he said.
“Here?”
“Go on, show me.”
“Do you really want me to?”
“I have to see it.”
I looked around. The café was almost empty. I took the balls out of the bag, three in one hand, two in the other. I stood up.
“Are you paying attention?” I said.
“Yes.”
“You have to concentrate.”
“I’m concentrating.”
I began. It went right for about one second and then they went everywhere. One hit Josh, one hit my empty coffee cup.
“That gives you the general idea,” I said, and scrambled under the table for one that had bounced into the corner.
“Is that it?” he said, smiling.
“Well if it was easy, everybody would be doing it.”
“No, it was great,” he said, and he started laughing and laughing. Maybe this was my gift to Josh, and my good-bye: Nadia the jester, the one who didn’t die, throwing colored balls around in a dark little café. A giggle, or maybe it was a sob, rose in my chest. I gathered the balls and put them back in the bag.
“I better get going,” I said.
“Me too.”
We kissed at the door of the café, once on each cheek, and then went out into the blasting cold. As we turned to walk off in our separate directions, he said:
“I still put flowers on her gravestone, you know.”
“I’m glad,” I said.
“I don’t forget.”
“Oh Josh,” I said. “You’re allowed to forget sometime. Everyone’s allowed to forget.”
But as I went down to the canal path and walked along it, toward my flat, I thought to myself: I can’t forget. I won’t forget them, the women who died. Zoe and Jenny. Sometimes I know that they are gone. They are not here, and never will be again, no matter how I wait for them, these women I never met. But I still catch myself believing that I will see them when I round the bend in the road, when I climb on board a crowded bus and make my way up the aisle looking for a seat, when I scan the faces in a moving crowd looking for a friend I was supposed to meet, when I open my eyes in the morning after a dream that seemed real, even when it was over.
I know their faces so well, better than the faces of anyone else, better than the face of my mother, my father; better than the face of a lover I once gazed at with passion and hope. I know their faces like my own face in the mirror. I have stared and stared at them, searching for clues, begging them to yield up their meanings, to help me. The tilt of a nose, the lift of a chin, the exact way she smiled, teeth gleaming; the exact way she frowned, with that little furrow between her eyes. Every wrinkle, groove, line, shadow, hollow, blemish, hurt.
I never met them, yet I miss them. I never knew them then, yet I know them now, when it’s too late. I know them in a way no one else ever could. They would have known me too. We might not have liked each other, but we are sisters under the skin, for their fear was my fear, their shame was my shame, their rage was mine, and their panic, and their violation, and their sense that there was nothing they could do, and their knowledge that the horror was coming nearer and nearer. I know what they felt. I felt it too.
Others will gradually forget them, or at least they will let them go. That’s how it should be when someone dies. The people who told them they loved them will say the same words to someone else. That’s fine, that’s right; that’s the only way we can cope with life. We’d go mad if we remembered everything-and hung on to it. So they’ll slide away. All their flaws and their irritating habits and their particular ways will fade, and they’ll become vague, less vivid and less human. Too good to be true: blank, shiny surfaces where other people can stare at their own reflections. Their graves will be visited more and more infrequently; soon only on anniversaries and days of special importance. People will tell stories about how they once knew them, for proximity to tragedy makes us feel somehow important. They will use a reverent and hushed voice to talk of them: Oh yes, wasn’t it terrible, what happened to Zoe, to Jenny? Wasn’t it sad?